Major James E. Bryan
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Major
James “JAMIE” EDWARD BRYAN was born on 19 October 1940 in Washington, DC, the
son of Lieutenant General Blackshear M. Bryan and Catherine Bryan. As an Army
brat, who traveled all over the world, Jamie developed a deep sense of pride in
our country and the military way of life. His father’s assignment to West Point
as superintendent in September of 1954 had a lasting impact on Jamie's life. He
established his goal to gain admission to West Point and to pursue a career in
the Army as an Infantry officer. It was also during this early stage of his life
that he developed a deep love for the outdoors and athletics which were to
become important cornerstones of his life. Upon graduation from Manlius School
in 1960, Jamie attended Braden's Preparatory School and subsequently entered
West Point with the Class of 1965.
During his
cadet days, Jamie won the lasting admiration and respect of his classmates and
all others with whom he came in contact. Jamie was always one to follow closely
the spirit, as well as the letter of regulations; his years at West Point were
characterized by serious personal application and uncommon devotion to duty
while providing a warm and sincere friendship to his classmates. Despite several
recurring injuries, he competed on corps squad hockey and lacrosse, earning a
Major “A” in the latter during his first class year. As a testimonial to his
character, his classmates showed their greatest confidence and trust in him by
electing him as a member of the cadet Honor Committee. Undoubtedly, his greatest
thrill as a cadet was his selection as a cadet captain and the commander of
Company A-1 . As a company commander, Jamie demonstrated the mature, no-nonsense
approach to leadership that would serve him so well in his short, yet brilliant,
Army career.
Upon
graduation, Jamie's lifelong dream was realized when he was commissioned into
the Infantry as a second lieutenant. After he completed Airborne and Ranger
schools at Fort Benning, Georgia, his request to serve with an airborne unit was
granted, and he was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry, 82nd Airborne
Division at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. While there, he served as a platoon
leader of rifle, anti tank, and reconnaissance platoons. Following this
assignment, he was selected to be the aide-de-camp to the commandant of the Army
War College at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where he served a year.
In 1967,
Jamie volunteered for duty in the Republic of Vietnam where he was assigned to
the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry, 1st Air Cavalry Division as a company
commander. Jamie was seriously wounded while leading his company and was awarded
the Purple Heart and Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry. Upon release from
Walter Reed Army Hospital, he was assigned as an instructor to the Jungle
Operations Training Center at Fort Sherman, Canal Zone. It was here that he met
his future wife, Barbara, whom he married in 1970.
Upon
recovering from his wounds, Jamie again, in 1969, volunteered for Vietnam and
returned to the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry, where he commanded another
company, was wounded a second time, and received his second Silver Star for
gallantry. Returning from Vietnam, he attended the Infantry Officers Advanced
Course at Fort Benning, Georgia, and was then assigned to West Point for three
years as a tactical officer and operations officer. During this tour at West
Point, he earned his master’s degree in business administration from Fairleigh
Dickinson University. He also spent many a late night trying to refine his
fishing skills on the lakes of Camp Buckner. Following his tour at West Point,
Jamie attended Command and General Staff College where he continued his avid
study of tactics and bass fishing.
In 1975,
Jamie reported to the 2d Battalion, 21st Infantry, 24th Infantry Division, Fort
Stewart, Georgia where he served initially as the operations officer and then as
the battalion executive officer. As with everything Jamie undertook, he quickly
gained the respect and admiration of the men with whom he served in the 24th
Infantry Division. In June 1977, he was selected to serve as the battalion
operations officer of the 1st Ranger Battalion at Fort Stewart. The demanding
mission, arduous training, and hand-picked soldiers of this elite organization
presented a very special challenge to which Jamie again responded magnificently.
Rangers of all ranks learned swiftly what the rest of us already knew: here was
a winner . . . here was a soldier!
On 14
September 1977, while he was coordinating his unit’s operations aboard an Air
Force command and control aircraft near Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, we
lost this great soldier and tremendous human being as the aircraft crashed into
the side of a mountain just after takeoff.
To those
of us who received the call that night, we will never forget the deep anguish
which we still feel today in our hearts. Many friends traveled with Barbara to
West Point. There, numerous other members of the family, family friends, and
classmates came together on a rainy afternoon on 22 September 1977, to pay final
respects to Jamie. It was a simple, yet beautiful ceremony. Taps played while
the Ranger escort detail presented Jamie’s mother and Barbara our national
colors. It was a ceremony of which Jamie would have approved, for it epitomized
the way of life he loved.
Jamie’s
return to West Point was most appropriate, for he had spent more years at West
Point than any other place in his life — first as a son, then as a cadet, and
finally as a tactical officer for the Corps of Cadets. For many of us, the most
memorable part of that ceremony occurred when Jamie was placed in his final
resting place beside his father, Lieutenant General Blackshear M. Bryan, ‘22,
and his brother, Major Blackshear M. Bryan, Jr., ‘54, who also had been killed
in an airplane crash, in the Republic of Vietnam on 22 September 1967.
It was a
memorable day, for it brought so many fine people together. We shared a common
grief for a soldier, husband, classmate and friend, who was always willing to
pay the ultimate price to defend our nation. God speed and rest well, Jamie.
You’ve epitomized the ethic: Duty, Honor, Country.
This information is provided as a service by
West-Point.Org.
Manzano Base, NM Tactical Air Command Jet Crashes, Sep 1977
Posted March 5th,
2008 by
Stu Beitler TEAMS PROBE
MOUNTAINSIDE PLANE CRASH. A Tactical Air
Command jet crashed and exploded on a mountainside nuclear storage facility at
top-secret Manzano Base late Wednesday night killing all 20 men on board. Albuquerque
Journal New Mexico 1977-09-16 |
RANGERS LEAD THE WAY!
